| Literature DB >> 34168006 |
David Jonathan Cook1,2, Stephen Webb3, Alastair Proudfoot4,5.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: acute myocardial infarction; advanced heart failure therapies (LV assist devices; cardiac arrhythmias and resuscitation science; heart failure; pharmacodynamics; total artificial heart)
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34168006 PMCID: PMC8862013 DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2019-315568
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart ISSN: 1355-6037 Impact factor: 5.994
Figure 1Physiological cascade of cardiac dysfunction following myocardial injury. LVEDP, left ventricular end diastolic pressure; LVESP, left ventricular end systolic pressure.
Aetiologies of acute heart failure syndromes
| Acute coronary syndrome |
Coronary artery disease. Coronary dissection. Coronary embolism. | |
| Valvular |
Acute valvular dysfunction, for example, endocarditis. Rheumatic heart disease. Degenerative heart disease. | |
| Hypertensive |
HFrEF. HFpEF. | |
| Primary cardiomyopathies | Genetic | Acquired |
|
Hypertrophic. Arrhythmogenic. LV non-compaction. Mitochondrial myopathies. Ion-channel disorders (eg, long QT, Brugada). |
Tachycardia-induced. Peripartum. Stress-induced (Takotsubo). Substance abuse (eg, alcohol). Toxin-related (eg, anthracycline). Inflammatory myocarditis. Chagas. HIV. Viral. Giant cell myocarditis. | |
| Secondary cardiomyopathies |
Amyloidosis. Sarcoidosis. Storage disease (eg, haemochromatosis, Fabry disease). Connective tissue disorder (eg, scleroderma). | |
Initial clinical evaluation should follow an aetiologically directed approach following the CHAMP acronym: acute Coronary syndrome, Hypertension emergency, Arrhythmia, acute Mechanical cause, Pulmonary embolism.
HFpEF, heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; HFrEF, heart failure with reduced ejection fraction; LV, left ventricle.
Figure 2Cardiogenic shock profiles and associated cardiac indices. CI, cardiac index; PCWP, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure; SVRI, systemic vascular resistance index.
Figure 3Management principles of acute cardiogenic shock. ABG, arterial blood gas; CHAMP, acute Coronary syndrome, Hypertension emergency, Arrhythmia, acute Mechanical cause, Pulmonary embolism; CO, cardiac output; CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure;; MCS, mechanical circulatory support; MDT, multidisciplinary team; NIPPV, non-invasive positive-pressure ventilation; PPV, positive pressure ventilation; RHC, right heart catheterisation.
Summary of the effects of commonly used vasoactive drugs on intensive care at the cellular level
| Medication | Dose (μg/kg/min, unless stated) | Receptors | ||||||
| Effect | Alpha 1 | Beta 1 | Beta 2 | Dopamine | V1 | PDE3 | ||
| Catecholamines | ||||||||
| Epinephrine | 0.01–0.1 | ↑SVR, ↑↑CO | + | +++ | + | |||
| 0.1–0.5 | ↑↑SVR ↑CO | +++ | + | + | ||||
| Norepinephrine | 0.04–0.4 | ↑↑SVR, ↑CO | ++++ | |||||
| Dopamine | 0.5–2 | ↑CO | + | +++ | ||||
| 5–10 | ↑↑CO, ↑SVR | + | +++ | + | ++ | |||
| >10 | ↑↑SVR, ↑CO | +++ | ++ | ++ | ||||
| Dobutamine | 2.5–20 | ↑↑CO, ↓SVR, ↓PVR | + | ++++ | ++ | |||
| Phosphodiesterase inhibitors | ||||||||
| Milrinone | 0.125–0.75 | ↑CO, ↓SVR, ↓PVR | – | |||||
| Calcium sensitisers | ||||||||
| Levosimendan | 0.05–0.2 | ↑CO, ↓SVR, ↓PVR | – | |||||
| Vasoconstrictors | ||||||||
| Phenylephrine | 0.1–10 | ↑↑SVR | ++++ | |||||
| Vasopressin | 0.02–0.04 U/min | ↑↑SVR ↔PVR | ++++ | |||||
↑, Increase; ↑↑, Significant increase; ↓, Decrease; ↔, No effect ort modest decrease; +, Increase
CO, cardiac output; PDE3, phosphodiesterase 3 receptor; PVR, peripheral vascular resistance; SVR, systemic vascular resistance; V1, vasopressin one receptor.
Vasoactive management of cardiogenic shock profiles
| Cause/presentation of CS | Vasoactive management considerations and rationale |
| ‘Classic’ cold and wet | First line: norepinephrine for initial haemodynamic stabilisation (preferred as less arrhythmogenic). Following BP control the addition of inotropic agent should be considered. |
| Euvolaemic cold and dry | First line: norepinephrine, followed by addition of inotropic agent. LVEDP may be low and respond to judicious filling. |
| Mixed warm and wet | Complicated clinical picture. Consider PAC. Norepinephrine should be first-line agent with use of subsequent vasoactive agents guided by clinical and haemodynamic assessment. |
| Right ventricular failure | Maintain preload with careful fluid boluses. |
Norepinephrine should generally be regarded as the first-line vasopressor.
BP, blood pressure; bpm, beats per minute; CS, cardiogenic shock; HR, heart rate; LVEDP, left ventricular end diastolic pressure; PAC, pulmonary artery catheter; PVR, pulmonary vascular resistance; RV, right ventricle; SVR, systemic vascular resistance.